My name is Georgia Gardner, I’m 22 years old, and I’ve had Alopecia Areata since I was four.
George Orwell once said that happiness can only exist in acceptance. I tend to agree with him. What he forgot to mention is that acceptance, like happiness, is not a moment or event, but a process.
In my 18 years with Alopecia, I’ve experienced it in almost all forms. Within 18 months of finding my first small patch, I had lost most of my eyebrows and eyelashes and began attending school. It actually took quite a while to diagnose my hair loss as Alopecia Areata. I remember going to have a blood test when I was small. I cried so much about the needle that the nurse gave me a Red Cross teddy bear. I named him Sad Cat.
I didn’t get bullied too much during primary school; I was a very loud and confident child, which I think helped. In one encounter with the school bully, she yelled, “Look at Georgia’s bald head” at me after class one day. I only yelled back, “Look at your fat mouth”. She didn’t bother me again. I also had a lot of really good, supportive friends. One friend decided to cut her own hair to ‘be like me’, on the night before school photos.
But things changed when I went to high school. Unfortunately, I was put into a class with none of my friends from primary school and felt extremely lonely.
I tried to hide my Alopecia. I would wear wigs constantly. I didn’t tell my closest friends and was terrified that people at school would find out. I withdrew. I would panic if someone came to the door and I didn’t have my wig on. I refused to go swimming or on sleepovers. When people asked about my baldness, I would pretend I didn’t know what they were talking about. I felt like I had to wear my wig and hide myself all the time. I felt very isolated and alone.
As I got older, I came to the realisation that in order to be happy, I had to find a way of accepting my Alopecia. For me that involved being honest about my hair loss – both to myself and others. I started wearing headscarves and hats, until a few years ago, when I stopped covering my head at all.